Fizzy Glitter Potions :: An Easy Sensory Play Idea

Summer and sensory play! They just go together. I love that the warm weather means those of us with mess aversions can breathe a little easier by taking it all outside! Sensory play is at its best outdoors where kids can engage all of their senses.

In the past few weeks, my go-to activity when sibling tension gets high or when a playdate reaches a lull has been the awesomest, easiest, most engaging bit of sensory wonder…

Fizzy glitter potions!

It’s an incredibly simple set-up with a few ingredients that you probably already have around the house. These glitter potions have kept my kids (and their friends) occupied for long stretches of time, especially in that late afternoon pre-dinner witching hour.

Ready to find out how to bring fizzy glitter potions, giggles, and intense expressions of concentration and wonder to your own backyard?

A tray to contain the mess (or go tray-free if you’re outdoors, whatever you prefer!)

Glitter Potion Set-up

Set out a container with baking soda and spoons (I just used regular bowls from the kitchen).

Fill a few glasses or jars with vinegar and add food coloring or liquid watercolor as desired.

If you have pipettes, it definitely makes for really fun squeezing as the vinegar fizzes into the baking soda. Spoons work, too!

And of course, set out some shakers of GLITTER!

Seriously, my favorite part about fizzy glitter potions is that you just can’t go wrong.

My kids like to start by spooning some baking soda into an empty glass and then they start squeezing different colors of vinegar on top. The fizzing part is pretty exciting, as you can see on our friend Z’s face below!

As the kids continue to add more of baking soda, vinegar and glitter, you can often see the layers build up in the glass or jar; it looks amazing!

My kids usually do keep doing this until they run out of baking soda and vinegar (so far, we haven’t been able to shake out all the glitter, but there is still time left this summer!)

Extend the Sensory Play!

Once we’re out of baking soda and vinegar, we end up with glasses filled with layer upon layer of this baking soda + vinegar + glitter mixture.

So what’s next?

In my kids’ world, stir it all together and turn it into a goopy paste!

If your kids don’t naturally do this, you can try posing an open-ended “I wonder…” question, such as “I wonder what would happen if you mixed that all together?” or “I wonder what that would feel like in your hands?” (Talking to your kids about their sensory play is a lot like talking to them about their art.)

At our house, usually all of the liquid ends up dumped out onto the trays or the table, and the paste gets spread all around (can you tell we’ve done this a whole bunch of times this summer?)

Ezra and Lucy are obsessed with all things cooking these days, so their paste often turns into “oiling the pan” and making some delicious sandwiches using leaves from the yard.

Glitter salad, anyone?

They can keep at this for hours and hours; on this occasion, I had to eventually pry them away to eat dinner (which, unfortunately, involved neither glitter salad nor glitter sandwiches!)

And I love that clean-up is such a snap when this kind of messy play is outside. Hooray!

If you haven’t tried sensory play with baking soda and vinegar, I hope this inspires you to channel your inner scientist / artist / chef / mess-maker!

This will be tomorrow’s fun artsy activity! Yesterday, we made the “Nature Bracelets” – and they were a BIG hit. One of them even had a couple of strange-looking beetles included! We made cardboard and stick frames for them. Such fun we have with all of you toddler ideas!

This was a fun activity but I used hundreds and thousands instead of glitter. I don’t understand how you would clean up if the mixture had glitter in it? Surely you don’t wash the glitter down the drain or leave it in your yard? It’s an environmental hazard… Could you promote this activity with an Eco friendly alternative?

Hi Kylie – thanks for your reminder to be eco-friendly. If you use a tray, it’s pretty easy to scrape the glitter into the trash at the end so that it doesn’t go down the drain. There are also some lovely biodegradable glitter alternatives. Here’s one :: https://www.wildbloomery.com/shop/18771905/eco-friendly-glitter. Happy creating!

Wonderful! Thanks for the tip, I really didn’t think Eco friendly glitter was a possibility but should have googled it first before complaining! Our mixture became very watery so I was uncertain how one would dispose of the glitter. Anyway many thanks for the reply, my little one will be thrilled by biodegradable glitter!

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